Federal Agency Fueling the Opioid Crisis

Here’s an Op-Ed by real experts in addiction from the NY Times that puts the blame where it belongs:

Every day, nearly 200 people across the country die from drug overdoses [from ALL drugs, legal and illicit, prescribed or not].The Drug Enforcement Administration, the agency that most directly oversees access to opioids, deserves much of the blame for these deaths.

Because of its incompetence, the opioid crisis has gone from bad to worse. The solution: overhauling the agency, or even getting rid of it entirely. The problem begins with poor design. A brainchild of Richard Nixon’s “war on drugs,” the agency sought to cut off supplies of drugs on the black market, here and abroad.

But in passing the Controlled Substances Act of 1970, Congress also gave the agency broad authority over how prescription opioids and other controlled substances were classified, produced and distributed.

The agency was supposed to curb problematic drug use, but failed to do so because its tactics were never informed by public health or addiction science.

Despite the investment of hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars and the earnest efforts of thousands of employees, the D.E.A.’s track record is abysmal.

The agency has been unable to balance legitimate access to and control of prescription drugs.

The Prescription Database Monitoring Program (PDMP) was supposed to be for patients and doctors, but the DEA regularly invades the doctor-patient relationship. It does “data dredging” on this medication database to pick out doctors who prescribe opioids “too much” or even just “more than average”.

How the DEA determines “too much” remains a secret and is not informed by any medical considerations, even though these are prescriptions arising from medical care.

It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that when you remove the outliers from groups, the next levels of intensity become the new outliers. Then you can cull the group repeatedly until none are left.

“Mission accomplished” by the DEA’s standards would leave serious chronic pain untreated. I still can’t understand how this law enforcement agency is allowed to make medical decisions.

Apparently, the American Medical Association is only concerned with intrusions into its money-making schemes and gives zero support to privacy concerns or the doctor-patient relationship.

The AMA is another organization that’s shown it’s true character in this crisis: craven and purely profit-driven.

The United States was ill equipped to navigate the worst drug crisis in its history with the D.E.A. at the vanguard.

Starting in the late 1990s the manufacturing, distribution and prescribing of opioids began to increase rapidly.

Overdose deaths soared since so many people were prescribed opioids and many mixed them with alcohol and other sedative drugs.

The D.E.A. could have marshaled a calibrated response, expanding evidence-based treatment and reducing the prescription of especially risky drug combinations.

A decade into the crisis, more and more prescription drug users turned to the black market. Even though the D.E.A. had tried to “eradicate” illicit drugs for nearly 50 years, users could easily buy stolen and counterfeit pills, along with a cheaper option, heroin. Soon, some began injecting. Outbreaks of H.I.V. and hepatitis C followed.

As the engine of overdose deaths shifted from prescription drugs to heroin, the D.E.A. turned to its supply-reduction playbook. This resulted in a major uptick in heroin seizures and high-profile prosecutions, which encouraged traffickers to create more compact, potent drugs

In a single year, from 2014 to 2015, deaths involving the synthetic opioid fentanyl and its analogues almost doubled, setting the stage for its current role as the principal driver of overdose fatalities. And since 2015, the agency has not had an appointed administrator.

We urgently need to rethink how our nation regulates drugs. What should our goals be? How can we design institutions and performance metrics to achieve them?

We ought to reinvent the Drug Enforcement Administration.

Considering its lack of public health and health care orientation, the agency’s regulatory authority over the pharmaceutical supply could be transferredto a strengthened and independent Food and Drug Administration, while the regulation of medical and pharmacy practice can be ceded to the states.

Parts of the D.E.A.’s law enforcement mandate should be transferred to the F.B.I., delegated back to the local or state, or eliminated. A significant portion of the D.E.A.’s budget should be reinvested in lifesaving measures like access to high-quality treatment.

The Drug Enforcement Administration has had over 40 years to win the war on drugs. Instead its tactics have fueled the opioid crisis.

To finally make a dent in this national emergency, we need to rethink the agency from the bottom up.

Authors: Professor Beletsky is the faculty director of Northeastern University’s Health in Justice Action Lab, where Jeremiah Goulka is a senior fellow.

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